Will Rogers
Will Rogers was a multi-talented individual who was a cowboy, mimic, actor, writer, comedian, and speaker. Rogers was able to be industrious and was well liked by individuals for being humorous and authentic. He was an American renaissance man for being talented in multiple disciplines and also being humble.
Will Rogers was born in Oklahoma in the early 1900s and was both Native American and Caucasian. Will Rogers was a multi-racial individual who worked in the 1920s and early 1930s in the Wild West shows making jokes and displaying his cowboy skills with the lariat. Will Rogers was able to persevere having humility working in vaudeville shows of the Wild West.
Rogers was against the bureaucracy and made fun of bureaucracy. Rogers was respected by the working man. For having values and humility, Rogers was listened to on the radio by millions of people, and his writer's column in the newspaper was read by multiple people. Rogers was also an actor in Western films, and many people went to see his movies in the theaters. Rogers was one of the most liked actors of his time for being humble and sincere.
Will Rogers was a man that spoke in a positive manner and also was productive. He was killed in a plane crash while traveling (it is unknown if he was envied by the bureaucracy being that he was well liked by Americans and also was unique.)
Will Rogers Spoke Out Against Bureaucracy and Socialism in the 1930s
"In Louisiana they vote by electricity. It's a marvelous way to vote, but Huey runs the switchboard, so it doesn't matter which button the boys press, all the answers come out yes."- Rogers on Corruption and Irregularities in the Voting System in 1928 Louisiana
Will Rogers fought against bureaucracy by speaking and writing about the incongruencies and corruption of the time. Rogers had a newspaper column where he spoke about different topics including the corruption that was occuring in Louisiana by the Governor of Louisiana. The Governor of Lousiana, Huey Long, was a known briber, liar, and adulterer. (Huey Long was also a socialist promising redistribution of wealth and a monthly income without the need to work while being a liar and corrupt. It was known that he bribed and even intimidated opposition.) Rogers described the discrepancies in the voting system in Louisiana in the 1930s. It is quite possible that he may have been envied by either corrupt socialists like Huey Long for exposing the truth of corruption in the Governorship of Louisiana in the 1930s and/or by the FBI for being positive and liked by Americans. It is a known fact that the FBI also has worked with corrupt individuals (while most tv series and books state that the FBI infiltrated such corrupt crime groups, there are theories that state that in some cases they even worked with corrupt individuals seen in Lucky Luciano's rise in the mafia while being an FBI agent. This allows us to know that the FBI has also enganged in unethical behavior and perpetrated corruption. It is difficult to say when the FBI agents are trying to help and when they are practicing corruption for the sake of practicing corruption seen in the rise of Lucky Luciano in the 1930s and the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s. It is possible that Carmichael was also a CIA or FBI agent who was tasked to infiltrate SNCC, oppose MLK and the Civil Right's Movement, and lead to socialism and violence.)
Will Rogers may have been envied by Huey Long and by the FBI for being a comedian, actor, and writer among the many talented skills that he had. While the Great Depression was happening, Rogers took to make comedy and kept people seeing the positive of life with writing and acting. It is possible that Will Rogers' plane crash may have been provoked by enviers due to his positivity and exposition of corruption. Huey Long would be shot and killed a year after Will Rogers' plane crashed and may describe that there was instantaneous justice. Will Rogers was a humble individual who practiced genuine empathy and even described that he never met an individual that he never liked describing that he had genuine empathy for his American bretheren. It is a well known fact that Will Rogers was one of the most well liked actors of the 1920s and 1930s for being positive and hating corruption.
"I have never met a man I did not like."
America A to Z from Reader's Digest
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